r.kv.r.y. quarterly
literary journal
fall 2006
literary non-fiction
She, my cousin, sat next to me as children looked for plastic and real
eggs in hidden places in the backyard of our rich uncle’s house.
She stared hard at the empty sleeve and deep lacerations on my forehead
and along my neck, the result of an automobile accident; 23 broken bones,
a crushed skull, partial mutilation of the left ear, innumerable cuts and
perforations from windshield glass and shards of fiberglass and mirror and
metal, etc., an arm missing from the shoulder down, a crushed testicle—
she had a good look at me for the first time since the wreck—it was a
sunny day and all the bodily damage was now revealed for the outlandish
display that it was—it was a bright day, the celebration of the Resurrection
of Christ, after two days of absolute Death…I lived in her father’s shed, my
uncle’s shed, self-imposed exile where I had taken up systematic reading of
religious and anti-religious books, the Bible and Sartre for example—the
family, my maternal aunt and her husband, wanted me to live inside their
warehouse of a house—with all the other strays she picked up over the
years (my aunt herself was a cripple—a severe nerve condition that tangled
up her legs, in which she could only get around with a 3 pronged cane or a
4 legged walker) but I refused their generosity—the place for me was
outside the house, outside house civilization, house culture; I had to come
to terms with my new ugliness—my new crippledness, my deep fleshy scars
and amputations of dozens of bones; books allowed me to forget about
my body, especially religious texts and philosophy—my cousin didn’t read,
didn’t like books, thought anyone who read as much as I did must be a
Satanist, no matter what they were reading, and I was already suspected
of Satanism long before the accident because the music I listened to was
hard and fast with band names like Storm Troopers of Death, Methods of
Destruction, Cromags, Volvex, Venom, Megadeth, Obituary, Death Angel,
but that was all just for fun, now I really was straight from Hell, or, at least
looked like it, which amounts to the same thing—my cousin was illiterate,
therefore she could see that my eyes revealed something far beyond her
world of backyard parties, television, and hanging out at the mall on
weekend nights—I had taken to drinking lots of rum in those days,
especially on religious holidays like this one, this was my first Easter as an
amputee, I was already drunk and was still drinking beyond even the outer
extremes of drunkenness, just to see what would happen, still pushing
myself further and further to the brink of sanity, and somehow the worst
always happed to me, not usually, but always, the Worst; the rum drunk
was now almost as Transcendental as the morphine drip injected straight
into my heart for 6 full weeks in the hospital, there’s nothing like it in this
whole goddamned emptied out world—and she wouldn’t stop staring me
up and down—I thought she was making sexual advances at first—one of
the little girls in the Easter egg hunt cut her hand badly on a sliver of
broken mirror in the tool shed, and the 3 year old began screaming as
badly as I did once I woke up in the hospital after being in a coma for
weeks—I was quite drunk, yet lucid, that’s always been my problem, I can
never lose myself entirely and I reached out to touch my cousin’s long thick
blue-black working class teenager hair and then she screamed louder than
the little girl who flayed open her palm—my cousin then pushed me so
hard that I feel off the bench entirely and hit the lawn hard, she ran—I
sprang up from the suburban grass and ran after her—then it was as if the
whole family, this tribe of people who had raised me all my life and who had
made me who I was, now they wanted nothing more than to erase me from
their lives, because I, Lucas Jeanfreaux, the first born and the most
handsome to have ever been born to them, now was hideously deformed,
something re-sent to them from their worse nightmare, a nightmare made
tangible in the form of my body, eat from it, and drink from my blood as if
it were wine, wine from Galilee—aunt, uncle, mother, brother even, were
coming at me from all angles to stop me from pursuing my peasant cousin
and pouncing on her, this cousin who had the nerve to stare down my
infirmities and further to push me, the first born, off the bench and I ran
well past my cousin and through the backyard gate and I kept running for
blocks, that quickly turned into miles until I reached the outskirts of town—
hours later somehow, I awoke on side the road—my step-father and only
mother looking down on me—telling me it was time to go, to find a new
home, and never to come back.
1989
